Bad Daddy (A Story of Reckoning)
Genre: Psychological drama / literary fiction
Length & format: Novel (approx. 80–95k words)
Premise
A son returns to his small hometown after the death of his estranged father and uncovers a pattern of abuse, secrets, and betrayals that force him to confront his own complicity and reshape his understanding of family, forgiveness, and justice.
Main characters
- Ethan Mercer (protagonist): Early 30s, a schoolteacher who left home to escape emotional neglect. Reserved, introspective, tries to live morally while wrestling with resentment.
- Robert “Bob” Mercer (deceased father): Charismatic in public, controlling and manipulative in private; his hidden abuses ripple through the town.
- Maya Alvarez: Ethan’s childhood friend and local reporter who helps investigate Bob’s past; skeptical but compassionate.
- Lena Mercer: Ethan’s younger sister, lives with lingering trauma and ambivalence toward justice.
- Sheriff Alan Price: Local authority torn between protecting the town’s reputation and seeking truth.
Key themes
- Intergenerational trauma: How abusive patterns are transmitted and normalized.
- Memory and truth: Unreliable recollections, selective silence, and the pursuit of factual reckoning.
- Accountability vs. forgiveness: Tension between seeking justice and the human need to forgive.
- Small-town complicity: The social dynamics that enable abusers to remain unchallenged.
Plot arc (concise)
- Ethan returns for the funeral; initial cold reception from family and townspeople.
- He finds his father’s journals and a stack of anonymous letters suggesting more victims.
- Ethan and Maya investigate, interview locals, and uncover a network of hush-money, threats, and coerced silence.
- Lena resists at first but gradually reveals her own abuses; family fractures deepen.
- Public exposure leads to legal action, town reckonings, and personal confrontations.
- Ethan faces a moral choice: prosecute and risk ruining many lives, or prioritize privacy and forced peace.
- Resolution is bittersweet—some accountability, ongoing healing, and an uncertain but hopeful path forward.
Tone & style
- Intimate, restrained prose with sharp, observational detail.
- Alternating close third-person focused on Ethan and interspersed diary/journal excerpts from Bob to show contrasting perspectives.
- Slow-burn pacing with tense, emotional climaxes.
Hooks / Selling points
- Timely exploration of accountability in tight-knit communities.
- Complex, morally ambiguous characters rather than clear villains.
- Appeals to readers of literary domestic dramas and psychological suspense.
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